A steady rising flood of Twitter posts — sketchy as the actual details might be — will do the trick.

Which brings us to Joel Osteen, the smiling televangelist known for his prosperity gospel sermons and oatmeal-mushy theology.

In other words, Osteen deserves whatever criticism that that the Twitter nazi want to throw at him.

Or, as that giant of evangelical social media commentary — Ed Stetzer — put it: "Man, some people hate Joel Osteen more than they love the truth ..."

You think?

At this point, I should confess my own sin and admit how hard I laughed when I saw this tweet about Osteen and the Lakewood Church in Houston supposedly displaying their cold, hypocritical hearts by refusing to open their building to Hurricane Harvey victims:

Joel Osteen won't open his church that holds 16,000 to hurricane victims because it only provides shelter from taxes. #HoustonStrong

On a more serious note, I interviewed Osteen and his wife, Victoria, for The Associated Press when Lakewood was planning to move into the Houston Rockets' old arena. They were kind to me and answered all my questions.

Following claims from around the internet that Lakewood Church, and its leader, Joel Osteen, weren't doing anything for the victims of Tropical Storm Harvey, the organization is speaking out Monday night to try and set the record straight.

Don Iloff, spokesperson for Lakewood, told Chron.com late Monday night that the church has never been closed during Harvey and staff was instructed to aid anyone who came to their doors looking for help.

Did you catch that wording?: "claims from around the internet." Wow, that sourcing inspires confidence in the information! Yet this story is national news at CNN,ABC News, the Washington Post,USA Todayand elsewhere.

My point is not that Osteen is a victim in this week's headlines — well, that's not my entire point. But my bigger point is this: In journalism (and perhaps even on Twitter), facts and context matter. Or at least they should.

For example, this paragraph at the end of the ABC story is interesting:

The church was previously active in relief efforts, including sheltering displaced victims during Hurricane Katrina in 2005.

Iloff said that the one detail being overlooked in the current narrative is that Lakewood has a “history of sheltering people,” pointing back to Tropical Storm Allison, which devastated the region back in 2001. The church, which was still in its former location and hadn’t yet moved to the arena, housed 3,000 people and became the largest shelter in the city.